US defense department wants to fund open, interoperable 5G

Washington looks to private sector help for Open RAN ambitions

By Brandon Vigliarolo     Sun 10 Apr 2022 // 11:31 UTC
https://www.theregister.com/2022/04/10/us_govt_has_3m_to/


The US Department of Defense is encouraging companies to build open and 
interoperable 5G, and it's willing to shell out a portion of $3 million to 
anyone who provides a solution.

That's the gist of the DoD and National Telecommunications and Information 
Administration (NTIA) Institute for Telecommunication Sciences' (ITS) 5G 
Challenge Preliminary Event.

https://www.challenge.gov/?challenge=5g-challenge-2022

Entry in the 5G RAN interoperability challenge is open now, and contestants 
have until May 5, 2022, to enter. ®

In particular, the DoD and ITS are looking for hardware and/or software 
solutions compliant with the 3GPP R15 standard and O-RAN alliance 
specifications that are parts of a Radio Access Network unit:

The radio unit (RU), distributed unit (DU) and centralized unit (CU).

The US already earmarked $750m in special grants back in 2020 to support the 
domestic development of the open standards tech.


Analysts at the Dell'Oro Group in 2021 revised their forecasts for worldwide 
OpenRAN revenues upwards - projecting that they would hit between $10 billion 
and $15 billion by 2025.

RAN networks are what connect cellphones and other mobile devices to carrier 5G 
networks, and the DoD said that the current state of wireless networks and 
proprietary RANs has been a disaster.

Each element in the network contains closed-source components, and a change to 
one part of the network can require reverification of the entire system.

"This industry dynamic increases costs, slows innovation, and reduces 
competition, often making security issues difficult to detect and resolve," the 
DoD said.

To that end, the challenge aims to foster a world of 5G plug-and-play 
interoperability that will "foster a large, vibrant, and diverse vendor 
community [while]unleashing a new era of technological innovation based on this 
critical technology."


It would be hard to discuss innovation in the US 5G space without mentioning 
China, which has led 5G deployments and development in recent years. It's no 
coincidence that the 5G Challenge emerged when it did, either: The DoD's acting 
5G program director Amanda Toman said as much.

It won't have gone unnoticed, either, that Huawei still holds many of the 5G 
patents.

"5G is too critical a technology sector to relinquish to countries whose 
products and technologies are not aligned with our standards of privacy and 
security," Toman said in the DoD's announcement of the challenge.

The 5G preliminary challenge

The 5G Challenge Preliminary Event is focusing solely on RAN subsystem 
interoperability.

It has the state goals of utilizing existing open interface standards, 
considering industry trends (toward virtualization, softwarization and cloud 
migration), developing modular hardware, demonstrating multi-vendor 
interoperability, and lowering barriers to entry for new companies.

The challenge is being hosted by Louisville, Colorado-based CableLabs, a 
research lab for the cable industry with a history of supporting 
interoperability events.

Participants will be given time in the lab with an emulated 5G system, two SA 
5G cores and two vRANs.

Those whose designs are selected will be splitting one of two prize pools: Up 
to 12 teams will split $2 million ($150,000 each) at the end of stage two of 
the competition (emulated integration), and one team will win an additional 
$200,000.

Finally, at the network integration stage that will end the competition, up to 
four teams will each get $250,000.

Entry in the 5G RAN interoperability challenge is open now, and contestants 
have until May 5, 2022, to enter. ®

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